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IS CHINA CONNING NZ? investment, migration and political moves detailed in ‘Operation Sidewinder’ briefing leaked to Investigate
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12 MISSING PIECES
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EXCLUSIVE: A new book re-analyses the evidence in the Tamihere case, and names a man who allegedly confessed to his involvement. IAN WISHART has more
22 CHINA SYNDROME
It’s great to have Chinese investment, migration and political donations, right? A new intelligence briefing suggests more is going on than our government wants us to know. IAN WISHART reports
ers: d r u m ’ ists r ce u n o T e d h i s v i e Swed nting new the hau
26 THE KONY TAPE
ALAN BOSWELL investigates the Lord’s Resistance Army of Joseph Kony, and the controversial charity behind the Kony Youtube film
rOtR a h s i W Ian SELLING AUTH
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So you think you know what they’re teaching your kids at school? RICHARD O’KEEFE asked to see the textbook and was stunned
12
HIS/contents opinion
4 /EDITOR Speaks for itself, really 6 /COMMUNIQUES Your say 8 /EYES RIGHT Richard Prosser 10 /STEYNPOST Mark Steyn
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36 /INVEST Peter Hensley on money 44 /MUSIC Lenny Kravitz interview
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editor
Now increasingly-pressured scientists have broken cover and openly called for an authoritarian world government to be implemented to force climate change acceptance on the world’s population
4 HISMAGAZINE.TV Apr/May 2012
The real agenda
W
hat was once a hidden agenda has now become an open secret: as efforts to browbeat the public into believing in climate change fail, scientists are now openly calling for a new World Government to force people to make changes and accept new climate taxes. The 2009 edition of my book Air Con was the first mainstream publication to directly link the climate change scare to globalisation and world government agendas. However, now increasingly-pressured scientists have broken cover and openly called for an authoritarian world government to be implemented to force climate change acceptance on the world’s population. Where persuasion has failed because the evidence doesn’t stack up, the global forces hoping to make a financial killing from climate change laws have convinced their scientific sock-puppets to make a political case for global governance. Earlier this month, 32 scientists published just such a call in the journal Science, and now, Under the heading “Effective World Government will be needed to Stave Off Climate Catastrophe”, the journal Scientific American also makes the case: “I’ve come to the conclusion that the technical details are the easy part. It’s the social engineering that’s the killer. Moon shots and Manhattan Projects are child’s play compared to needed changes in the way we behave. “A policy article authored by several dozen scientists appeared online March 15 in Science to acknowledge this point: “Human
societies must now change course and steer away from critical tipping points in the Earth system that might lead to rapid and irreversible change. This requires fundamental reorientation and restructuring of national and international institutions toward more effective Earth system governance and planetary stewardship.” “The authors called for a “constitutional moment” at the upcoming 2012 U.N. Conference on Sustainable Development in Rio in June to reform world politics and government. “Among the proposals: a call to replace the largely ineffective U.N. Commission on Sustainable Development with a council that reports to the U.N. General Assembly. “Unfortunately, far more is needed. To be effective, a new set of institutions would have to be imbued with heavy-handed, transnational enforcement powers.” This latest call, and the approach of Rio 2012, dovetails almost perfectly with an agenda document published by Socialist International in 2005 as a high-level briefing document for the United Nations. This is not about the theme from Twilight Zone, this is simply about following the power and the money and the old adage, cui bono – who benefits? The push for World Government is no longer a ‘conspiracy theory’ but an inconvenient fact. The only question now is how much input into the debate the public would like to have.
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communiques Classmates have memories of dress. Example an embroidered flag of Japan on the back of his blue jeans 1970 – 72. Back then the Home Room / Roll Call was in Alphabetical order last names by Division A – C etc. John was in my home room. Hoping this info you can add to your paperwork of John. I would enjoy the Film if it ever came out. Rod Bojechko Canada
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Volume 10, Issue 131, ISSN 1175-1290 [Print] Chief Executive Officer Heidi Wishart Group Managing Editor Ian Wishart NZ EDITION Advertising Josephine Martin 09 373-3676 sales@investigatemagazine.com Contributing Writers: Hal Colebatch, Amy Brooke, Chris Forster, Peter Hensley, Mark Steyn, Chris Philpott, Michael Morrissey, Miranda Devine, Richard Prosser, Claire Morrow, James Morrow, Len Restall, Laura Wilson, and the worldwide resources of MCTribune Group, UPI and Newscom Art Direction Heidi Wishart Design & Layout Bozidar Jokanovic Tel: +64 9 373 3676 Fax: +64 9 373 3667 Investigate Magazine, PO Box 188, Kaukapakapa, Auckland 0843, NEW ZEALAND AUSTRALIAN EDITION Editor Ian Wishart Advertising sales@investigatemagazine.com Tel/Fax: 1-800 123 983 SUBSCRIPTIONS Online: www.investigatemagazine.com By Phone: Australia 1-800 123 983 NZ 09 373 3676 By Post: To the PO Box NZ Edition: $85; AU Edition: A$96 Email: editorial@investigatemagazine.com, ian@investigatemagazine.com, australia@investigatemagazine.com, sales@investigatemagazine.com, helpdesk@investigatemagazine.tv All content in this magazine is copyright, and may not be reproduced in any form without the written permission of the publisher. The opinions of advertisers or contributors are not necessarily those of the magazine, and no liability is accepted. We take no responsibility for unsolicited material sent to us. Please enclose a stamped, SAE envelope. Inquiries in the first instance should be made via email or fax. Investigate magazine Australasia is published by HATM Magazines Ltd
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SUSPECTED MURDERER WANTED BY SCHOOL Whatever happened to John Gordon Abbot? That is a BIG topic of conversation right now as our Grad Class of 1972 is entering into our 40th Year. I am heading the Lost and Found Committee, with a list of past students to locate. Apparently you located his whereabouts for us but he is still lost. We have talked about placing an information page John Abbott for general conversation. Kind of a touchy subject, but how many grad classes can boast of having a psychotic genius millionaire university lecturer, who is also a convicted felon, murder suspect, and escaped felon, among their ranks? I would like to acknowledge him at least with an invitation to our celebration. I have an idea that he will not attend, but he might respond to us if we send the invite anyway, even if it is in Japanese. Could you please direct me to the exact university that he is teaching in so I may send the invite in that direction? I believe that your interests in John Abbott story could be sparked. We have read your story and are currently chatting about John Abbott our old classmate. There is more than one picture of him. Our year book for one, and a poem that was published back in grade 11..1971
EDITOR’S RESPONSE If we see the elusive Mr Abbott, we’ll be sure to pass on your invitation. Last heard he was hiding in England.
Poetry
Causa mortis
“Life is immense,” wrote Rab Tagore, That’s “Prano virat,” in Sanskrit Death is quite trivial, and a bore, Why not stop resurrecting it? The Lives of Others run along Recorded in the files or sands These others who once held me down With knotted brows and clotted hands. And when they die, do I bob up Like cork from rotted nets released? To hog the surface for a while To write the menu, host the feast? Or do I simply stay below, Observing coral’s near-kinship With such a fragile wood as I? It’s hard to think it’s worth the trip. Life is immense, and splendid, too We lose the detail in the slaughter The masculine desire to lead The pack, the press, the doctor’s daughter Obituaries rarely state One cause of death invokes them all Whichever organ shuts your gate, Pathology means feeling small. Greig Fleming
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Richard Prosser
eyes right
Your scribe has long held a belief that the sharing and appreciation of culture should be high on the list of desirable attributes for would-be migrants to New Zealand, and often incurred the wrath of the politically correct for so thinking
8 HISMAGAZINE.TV Apr/May 2012
Birds of a feather
I
’m in London this month (again), hav ing just attended the 61st Commonwealth Parliamentary Association Seminar on Practice and Procedure at Westminster. There were 50 delegates from 29 countries, three of us from New Zealand. I was here only six weeks ago, as regular readers will recall, and it’s still a long way to come. Since becoming a politician in November it seems I’m spending half my life on aeroplanes, but this is the first time ever that I’ve been right up the pointy end, the comfy bit with the lie down seats and the metal cutlery and the expensive wine, so I have to say a big and genuine thank-you to you the taxpayer for shouting me the trip. I will do my best to make it worth your while. And I think it is worthwhile. To my own surprise I have discovered a relevance to the Commonwealth which I genuinely wasn’t expecting to find, in this day and age where old Mother Britain’s focus is ever more Eurocentric, and more countries within what was once the Empire are now republics than not. We have more in common with Pomgolia’s other former colonies than I suspect many of us realised, this writer included. Now don’t get me wrong, Prosser hasn’t suddenly morphed into some touchy-feely internationalist, embracing of all things wonderful about developing nations. There are still problems aplenty facing some of the less advanced among our Family of States, and a long way to go for many of them before a true functioning representative democracy can be said to have been achieved. But they are trying to get there, their attendance of the abovementioned seminar being
testament to that desire. And perhaps more telling was the inclusion of a couple of territories which are not part of the Commonwealth, but who look upon the institution as the model of choice to be followed in their search for a fair and effective Parliamentary and Governmental regime. Indeed several countries which were never British colonies are in the process of applying to join the new fraternity that the Empire has become. Naturally I was not surprised by how close the practices and procedures of our own Parliament, and those of several other nations and jurisdictions, are to the British model on which they are based. I was surprised, however, at how willing the Poms seem to be, to examine and adopt certain of the innovations to those systems that have been developed by New Zealand, and by the national and regional assemblies of Australia and Canada. And there are concepts with which the Brits are beginning to experiment that I believe we may be able to gain some benefit from as well, which I will certainly be raising with my Parliamentary colleagues from across the House. In name and intention, the nations of Deepest Wogistan ostensibly have the same structures, and follow the same rituals, as do the members of the Old Commonwealth, New Zealand included; and yes, by that I do mean the white countries, and I can get away with saying that because everyone knows I’m not PC and therefore unafraid to draw the distinction. In practice, however, their delegates ruefully recounted tales of nepotism, corruption, tribal affiliations, and other departures from the accepted norms
of civilised behaviour which we ourselves take for granted, and which we work to maintain and uphold with every action conscious and subconscious. So there are aspects of history and commonality which bind us together, but there are also realities of like and familiarity which set us apart. We socialised after work, as delegates to any Conference are wont to do; taking the sights of London, sharing meals, swapping notes over a few cleansing ales at the house bar. But we didn’t really mingle. Neither by accident nor design, but rather I think guided by something more subconscious, the representatives from New Zealand, Australia, and Canada hung out together, while the Africans largely went off and did their own thing. There was nothing spoken or pre-ordained in the way this unfolded; people simply coalesced where and with whom they felt most comfortable. And it wasn’t a racial divide either, but one of nations based on similarity of culture. Even in a melting pot, there are, it would seem, areas of distinct flavour. I have a point, of course, and I’m getting to it. In any meeting of peoples and nations there is an inevitable discussion around the makeup of societies, and the relative ease, or not, with which citizens choose, and are permitted, to move and to assimilate between them. Your scribe has long held a belief that the sharing and appreciation of culture should be high on the list of desirable attributes for would-be migrants to New Zealand, and often incurred the wrath of the politically correct for so thinking. As readers would expect, I don’t care. I know my outlook is shared by many if not most of the mainstream of middle New Zealand, and in the light of that, accusations of racism are water off a duck’s back for your favourite commentator. I know it’s rubbish, and I’m not fussed who thinks otherwise. We will probably always need, as I have remarked before, a level of immigration into New Zealand. I make no apology for proclaiming that such immigration should be constrained in number by the requirements of our society, and confined in nature to those migrants who most closely resemble and understand the defining features and idiosyncrasies of our flock. Some people from some societies around the world are more like us than others. Some speak English, solely or at least alongside something else right from the cradle; some celebrate Christmas, while others do not. Some drink cold beer and go to the footy at the weekends, while others are stoned to death for consuming alcohol or water-cannoned for daring to resist the bulldozing of their homes. Some burn steak on the BBQ in the backyard, others burn effigies in the streets. I think you get my point. Millions of people from all around the world would like to come and live in peaceable, affluent New Zealand. We don’t need many of them, and we can afford to be choosy. Top of the list, beyond desirable qualifications and essential skills, should be language, in my book. Standing in the queue for Customs and Immigration at Heathrow with all the other “foreigners” – being a representative of the New Zealand Parliament meant, paradoxically, that this visit is the first time I have entered the UK on my New Zealand passport rather than my British one – I was struck by the curious reality that a greater proportion of people in the “All Other Passports” line were native English speakers, than were those who sauntered
in unquestioned through the EU turnstiles. Britain may have chosen to stray from her roots, but that doesn’t mean we have to do the same. Second, I would posit, should be culture. In this writer’s opinion, for example, an ethnic Han Chinese migrant from Hong Kong or Singapore should be a long way up the queue ahead of a Chinese mainlander who doesn’t know two words of English let alone the meaning of Easter, but who has purchased permanent residency under the National Government’s soulless, cynical, and morally bankrupt – if not potentially treasonous – $10 million passports-for-sale “business migrant” scam scheme. In selecting the best candidates from the hordes who apply we owe it, to our forebears and our children both, to afford adequate regard to those who will pay the greatest respect and thereby make the greatest contribution to the continuance of our hard-won values and traditions. Beyond our established Traditional Source Countries, the Commonwealth may not be the complete answer by any means; but I do believe it’s as good a place as any to start. Richard Prosser © 2012
HISMAGAZINE.TV Apr/May 2012 9